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Tilak Maharashtra Vidyapeeth, Pune Faculty of Distance Education Tally (Notes) B.A. (Visharad) Social Sciences SECOND YEAR FOURTH SEMESTER INDEX No. Topic Page No. 1. INTRODUCTION TO ACCOUNTING 2 2. TALLY.ERP 9 11 3. INTRODUCTION TO TALLY 13 4. ACCOUNTING INFORMATION 19 5. VOUCHER ENTRIES IN TALLY 27 1 Tally.ERP 9 INTRODUCTION TO ACCOUNTING 1 CHAPTER Need for Accounting → Accounting is the language of business. It is the art of recording classifying and summarizing in a significant manner and in terms of money, transactions and events which are in part at least of a Financial Character and interpreting the result thereof. In simple terms accounting means :- a) recording b) classifying c) Summarizing all the transactions which take place in the day to day business. This is done for a particular period of 12 months called a 'Financial Year'. It generally starts on 1st April and ends on 31st March. All the information of this period taken for Interpreting Financial events is helpful for decision making. A person running a business needs to know his :- 1) Assets [What he owns]. 2) Liabilities [What he owes]. 3) Profit or Loss. 4) Accordingly the future planning. In short accounting means recording the transactions. So what is transaction? Transaction is an event, which definitely affects the financial position of the business. Hence, to become a transaction the event must fulfill the condition of making some change in the expenditure, income owning and Owings. The event taking place must make effect on profit or loss of the business. Merely placing of an order or just an enquiry is not a transaction. Transactions are of two types Transactions Cash Credit [Immediate Payment] [The payment is done after some period]. 2 Types of Accounts Types of Accounts Personal Impersonal [Account dealing with an individual, companies Institutions etc.] Real Nominal It deals with Tangible Intangible the [Which can be [Which cannot be expenses, touched, felt and measured, felt in terms losses, measured] e.g. Cash, of money e.g. incomes and building, furniture, Goodwill, Patent etc] gains e.g. stock etc. rent, salary etc. Some Important Terms’ ASSETS → Anything which will enable a business enterprise to get cash or a benefit in future is 'Asset'. These are of three types. • Fixed Assets → Assets acquired relatively for a long period to carry the business e.g. land and building, furniture, plant and machinery etc. • Current Assets → Assets which are held essentially for a short period and are meant for converting into cash. e.g. cash, inventories, bills receivable etc. • Liquid Assets → Assets which are immediately convertible into cash without much loss. e.g. marketable securities, stamps etc. LIABILITIES → It is the amount which a business owes or has to return. e.g. loans taken from banks etc. • Capital → It refers to the amount invested in a business enterprise. • Revenue → It refers to the income of a recurring nature from any source related to business. • Expenses → It denotes the cost of services and things used for generating revenue 3.
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